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People supremely confident in their views

COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 4 (UPI) -- People with a strong opinion on an issue they say matters, who then learn most disagree, become doubly sure they are right, U.S. and Spanish researchers say.

Study co-author Richard Petty, a professor of psychology at Ohio State University; Pablo Brinol, a former postdoctoral fellow at Ohio State, and Javier Horcago, both at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid in Spain; say people grow more confident in some beliefs when they find out a majority of people disagree with them.

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"You actually become doubly sure you were right," Petty says in a statement.

In the study, undergraduate students in Spain were told they would be examining the organizational conditions of an unfamiliar international company where they might get an internship.

Participants were given either a strong argument -- workers reported high satisfaction because of the flexibility of their work schedules -- or a weak argument, that the company's logo was very attractive.

After the students developed their views -- positive or negative views of the company -- half of the students were told that 86 percent of their fellow students supported the company, while the other half were told 14 percent supported the company.

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When asked to rate how confident they were in the positive or negative thoughts about the company, students who had a negative view of the company because of the weak arguments presented were actually more confident in their belief when they learned the majority of their fellow students disagreed with them.

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